Police renew plea for help to find Calgary man missing 2 weeks

Kelly Flock, 68, has a medical condition that requires regular medication

Image | Kelly Flock

Caption: Calgary police believed Kelly Flock, 68, may have been travelling on a dark charcoal road bicycle when he went missing on June 22. He was found dead on July 13. (Calgary Police Service)

Police are calling again for help finding a man who has been missing for two weeks in Calgary, including correcting his height and other details in their latest appeal.
Kelly Flock, 68, was last seen June 22 at a restaurant in the 2700 block of 34 Avenue SW. Since Flock disappeared, his family and friends have been searching the city. They've offered a $10,000 reward for information that helps find him.
Calgary Police Service issued a new appeal in a press release Wednesday night, saying his bike was dark charcoal and not silver, as they originally said.
They asked the public to keep an eye out for the Trek 5000 road bicycle with skinny tires, saying its location may help them find Flock.
The bike, a mid-90s model, has the word "Trek" written on the angle bar, "5000" on the vertical bar and "OCLV" on the horizontal bar. A water bottle holder is installed on the bike.

Image | flock missing bike

Caption: Flock was travelling on his bicycle, a dark charcoal Trek OCLV road bike, the night he was last seen. (Calgary Police Service)

They also corrected his height from earlier descriptions, saying he's five feet 11 inches tall, not five feet eight inches as they had earlier reported.
He weighs about 165 pounds.
Flock is described as being slim with grey hair and blue eyes.

Image | flock search party

Caption: Dozens of family members, friends and strangers turned out Monday to help search for Kelly Flock, 68, who has been missing for more than a week. (Jennifer Lee/CBC)

"We're desperate for anything. We want our dad back," daughter Kendra Flock told CBC News earlier this week.
Flock has a condition that requires he take medication regularly.
Police are asking anyone with information to call 403-266-1234 or contact Crime Stoppers(external link) anonymously.